Radio Explorer -- By Dmitry
Nefedov -- Graphic viewer for shortwave radio broadcasting schedules. Displays
data in a tree-like expanding table, on a 24-hour Gantt chart, and on a world
map with greyline and frequency coloring. Developed in Java and runs with
multiple operating systems including Windows and Linux. Can be installed with a
single click on a web page link via Java Web Start.

Harvester -
Signals Intelligence (SIGINT): HARVESTER is not just a frequency database;
it is a full Signals Intelligence collection suite capable of storing every
single piece of intelligence that you can glean from any COMINT, ELINT or FISINT
signal intercepted between 0 Hz to 100 GHz.
Code3 Gold
-- hottest VHF and Shortwave decoder to hit the streets. Over a year of hard
development work over at our Netherlands HQ has resulted in this latest decoder
product.

The "Radio Regulations" of the International
Telecommunications Union define the shortwave broadcast bands. At the 1992 World
Administrative Radio Conference, new bands were created and existing bands were
expanded. The band limits in the following table reflect the WARC-92 agreements
and broadcast band expansions used on a non-interfering basis (e.g., the 41 m
band starting at 6890 kHz on a non-interference basis): Although the allocations
do not become official until 2007, in practice many stations have already
started using the expanded portions under the motto "use it or lose it."
Additionally, there are a few stations that broadcast outside the band edges
above, e.g., Iran on 9022 and a number of African stations around 9200 kHz.
Clearly, receivers with continuous coverage between 1.6 and 30 MHz are
preferred.

AM
FM Zip Code Based Signal Strengths - From V-Soft Communications. Type in
your Zip Code - get a listing of AM Day, AM Night and FM stations in your area
with signal strengths. Click on Station Callsign to look up a station from the
FCC's CDBS database.

Find
AM/FM Raiod Stations -- uses FCC data for FM/AM radio stations, and
combines it with Google Maps (you can zoom in and see a station antenna) and the
FCC suggested coverage area. From Aaron Kreider

Scannerstuff Southern California
--
SCFD is the newest and most up to date scanner informationresource for Southern California. The all-in-one 448-page directory is
organized by county(including 10
Southern California counties.